Shalane Flanagan

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Shalane Flanagan
San Diego 2016)
  • Marathon: 2:21:14 (Berlin
  • 2014)
    Medal record
    Women's
    athletics
    Representing the  United States
    Olympic Games
    Silver medal – second place 2008 Beijing 10,000 m
    World Cross Country Championships
    Bronze medal – third place 2011 Punta Umbria Individual
    Bronze medal – third place 2011 Punta Umbria Team
    Bronze medal – third place 2010 Bydgoszcz Team
    World Marathon Majors
    Gold medal – first place 2017 New York Marathon
    Silver medal – second place 2010 New York Marathon
    Bronze medal – third place 2014 Berlin Marathon
    Bronze medal – third place 2018 New York Marathon

    Shalane Grace Flanagan (born July 8, 1981) is an American

    long-distance runner, Olympic medalist and New York City Marathon champion. She was the first American woman to win the New York City Marathon since 1977. She holds the NACAC area records in both the 10k and 15k road races.[1]

    She won the silver medal at the 2008 Olympics in the 10,000 m (upgraded from bronze following original silver medalist’s desqualification for doping)[2] and the bronze medal at the 2011 IAAF World Cross Country Championships. She won the Women's 2017 New York City Marathon, the first American woman to do so since Miki Gorman in 1977.[3]

    Personal life

    Flanagan grew up in Marblehead, Massachusetts. She attended Marblehead High School, where she excelled in cross country and track. She also participated in soccer and swimming, and was an artist and painter in the art major program.[4][5]

    Flanagan is married to Steven Ashley Edwards,[6] a former track and field star at the University of North Carolina. Together they are foster parents to Breauna and Keauna. While training for the Rio Olympics, one of her teammates from Bowerman Track Club Team emailed asking to find a foster home during their senior year of high school. Flanagan and her husband immediately welcomed Breuna and Keauna into their home.[7]

    Flanagan's parents are both accomplished runners. Her mother,

    Cheryl Treworgy, is a former marathon world record holder (as Cheryl Bridges – 1971) and a five-time U.S. World Cross Country Championship participant. Her father, Steve Flanagan, was also a U.S. World Cross Country Champion participant and marathon runner (PR 2:18). He raised Shalane and her sister Maggie in Marblehead with his second wife Monica.[8]

    In the fall of 2009, Flanagan volunteered as an assistant coach for the cross country team at her alma mater, the University of North Carolina.[9] In the fall of 2013, Flanagan volunteered as an assistant coach for the women cross country team at Portland State University.[10]

    On August 6, 2016, Flanagan and longtime college friend Elyse Kopecky published their first cookbook Run Fast.Eat Slow. Flanagan and Kopecky met in 2000 as teammates of the cross country team while attending the University of North Carolina. After they graduated from college, they both moved to Portland, Oregon, where Flanagan went to run for Nike and Kopecky went to work in marketing for Nike. Kopecky left her marketing career to pursue culinary nutrition school in New York City.[11] In 2013, Flanagan and Kopecky reunited in Portland where they came up with Run Fast Eat slow to prove that food could be both nourishing and delicious.[12] Their book went on to become a New York Times Best Seller. They toured together in Oregon, San Francisco and New York City, where their events included running, inspirational talks and a chance to meet and get to know the authors better. Due to Flanagan's New York City Marathon Training and the birth of Kopecky's baby, they had to limit the number of stops on their book tour. After doing their book tour they had a better understanding of the impact their Run Fast.Eat Slow book had on the running community. The fan feedback was that they wanted Flanagan and Kopecky to write a second cookbook which would be best suited for people with busy lifestyles. Flanagan and Kopecky went on to write their second cook book Run Fast, Cook Fast, Eat Slow which focused on less time-consuming recipes whilst not compromising nourishment or flavour. Flanagan [13] Their second cook book Run Fast, Cook Fast, Eat slow was published August 18, 2018.

    On April 29, 2020, Flanagan announced she and Edwards had adopted a baby boy, Jack Dean Edwards. On January 24, 2023 Flanagan announced on instagram that she and her husband adopted a baby girl, Grace Morgan Edwards. [14]

    Track and field career

    High school

    As a student at

    National Scholastic Indoor Championships.[21]

    College

    Flanagan attended the

    University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, where she won national cross country titles in 2002 and 2003—becoming the first individual champion in the sport in Tar Heel history—and numerous track accolades, with best times of 4:11.24 in 1500 m (7th in the U.S. at any level in 2003), 9:00.22 in the 3000 m and 15:20.54 in the 5000 m.[22] She won the Honda Sports Award as the best female collegiate cross country runner in the nation in both 2003 and 2004.[23][24]

    Professional career

    Early professional career (2004–2007)

    Early in her professional career, Flanagan was very successful. Since advancing to the professional level in 2004, by 2007, Flanagan lowered her 3000 m time to 8:33.25 and her 5000 m time to 14:44.80, the latter an American record at the time; she made a slight improvement to her 1500 m time of 4:05.86. She became a two-time outdoor track national champion in the women's

    5000 meters and an indoor track national champion in the 3000 m. She won the short course competition at the USA Cross Country Championships in 2004 and 2005.[25][26]
    Flanagan has been a Nike-sponsored athlete since graduating from the University of North Carolina at Chapel hill in 2004.[13]

    2008

    Flanagan became the long course national cross country champion for the first time in February 2008. She ran the 10,000 for the first time at the 2008

    Stanford Payton Jordan invite meeting, in a time of 30:34.49 to beat Deena Kastor's American record of 30:50.32. Flanagan credited her American record to the help of New Zealand's Kim Smith. Flanagan and Smith traded the lead position during the race, and Smith finished in 30:35.54.[27]

    At the

    American record in 30:22.22, shattering her own record set earlier in the year.[30][31] She is only the second American woman to receive an Olympic medal in the 10,000 m.[31]

    2009

    Flanagan (right) competing in the 2009 Boston Games

    In 2009, Flanagan split with coach John Cook and moved to Portland, Oregon, to begin working with new coach Jerry Schumacher.[32] She finished second to Amy Yoder Begley in the 10,000 m at the 2009 USA Track & Field Championships.[33] At the World Championships in Berlin, Flanagan finished in 14th place in the 10,000 m with a time of 31:32.19.

    2010

    Flanagan won her first half marathon in Houston at the USA Half Marathon Championships on January 17. She set the course record in a time of 1:09:45.[34][35] She added a second national championship with a victory at the USA Cross Country Championships.[36] At the World Cross Country Championships, Flanagan finished the individual race in 12th place with a time of 25:20. She was a member of the Team USA squad that earned a bronze medal.

    In June 2010, it was announced that Flanagan would make her marathon debut in the

    Philadelphia Half Marathon was just two seconds off Deena Kastor's American record at the event. Flanagan's time in Philadelphia brought her fourth place some 45 seconds behind winner Meseret Defar.[38] In her marathon debut, Flanagan finished in second place in a time of 2:28:40. It was the best finish for an American woman in 20 years at the New York City Marathon. Flanagan captured the U.S. Marathon championship in the race.[39] She took her fifth title at the National Cross Country Championships and asserted herself as the clear number one in the discipline, winning by a margin of 41 seconds.[40]

    2011

    At the World Cross Country Championships on March 20, 2011, Flanagan improved on her 12th place from the year before to place third, with a time of 25:10. She led the Team USA squad to a bronze medal. Flanagan was the first non-African born medalist in the event since 2004.[41] She competed in the June 2011 USA Championships in the 10,000 m and won with a time of 30:59.57, qualifying her for the 10,000 m at the World Championships.[42]

    On August 27, 2011, Flanagan finished seventh at the World Championships 10,000 m with a time of 31:25.57 minutes (the first non-East African born athlete to finish).

    Flanagan said in June 2011 that she was leaning towards running the marathon at the

    2012 London Olympics.[43] With this in mind, she ran at the first Miami Half Marathon in December and won in a Florida state record time of 1:09:58 hours.[44]

    2012

    Flanagan running in the 2012 Summer Olympics

    On January 14, 2012, Flanagan won the U.S. Olympic Trials Marathon in Houston, setting the event record at 2:25:38. She moved on to represent Team USA at the Olympic women's marathon in London, finishing 10th with a time of 2:25:51.[45][46] She defeated a high class field at the Lisbon Half Marathon in March, recording a time of 1:08:52.[47] She came in 25th at the 2012 IAAF World Half Marathon Championships.

    2013

    On February 2, 2013, in

    Rock 'n' Roll Mardi Gras Marathon in New Orleans.[49]

    Flanagan qualified for the 2013

    USA outdoor track title.[52] On August 11, 2013, Flanagan finished 8th at the IAAF world championship.[53]

    2014

    On March 15, 2014, in

    women's American Record of 47:00 to take down Deena Kastor's previous record of 47:15 that was set in 2003.[54]

    On April 21, 2014, Flanagan led the

    On September 28, 2014, Flanagan placed third in the Berlin Marathon, with a personal best of 2:21:14. It was the second fastest time ever by an American woman at the time, 7 seconds ahead of Joan Benoit's 1985 Chicago Marathon in 2:21:21 and 98 seconds behind Deena Kastor's 2006 London Marathon in 2:19:36. Her Berlin run now ranks third on the US all-time list after Jordan Hasay's 2:20:57 at the 2017 Chicago Marathon.[58]

    2015

    Shalane Flanagan finishing the 2016 U.S. Olympic Trials Marathon
    Shalane Flanagan collapses into Amy Cragg's arms while celebrating after the 2016 U.S. Olympic Trials Marathon

    Flanagan ran a time qualifier for the 2015 World Championships in Athletics and USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships with the top American time of the year[59] at the 2015 Stanford Invitational 10 km, where she ran 31:08,[60] pacing race winner Gelete Burka[61] in her 10 km debut. On April 20, 2015, Flanagan placed ninth in the Boston Marathon, with a season best of 2:27:47.[62]

    Flanagan finished 2nd to

    American record and placed 2nd in the road Rabobank Tilburg Ladies Run 10 km in Netherlands in 31:03,[66] one place ahead of Betsy Saina. Flanagan beat the national records of Lynn Jennings and Molly Huddle.[67]

    2016

    On February 13, 2016, Flanagan placed third, behind

    Amy Hastings (Cragg) and Desiree Linden, at the U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials, finishing in 2:29:19 on a warm day in Los Angeles.[68] On June 5, 2016, Flanagan placed first, setting a new PR in the half marathon, at the Suja Rock'n'Roll San Diego Marathon and half Marathon, with a time of 1:07:51.[69] Molly Huddle ran a 1:07:41 in New York City in March, while the American record is 1:07:34, set by Deena Kastor
    in Berlin in 2006.

    On June 26, 2016, Flanagan set an

    national record by 11 seconds and beat the previous B.A.A. 10K event record by 12 seconds (31:04, held by Mamitu Daska since 2014).[70] On August 14, 2016, Flanagan placed 6th at the 2016 Summer Olympics women's marathon
    in 2:25:26.

    On December 12, 2016, Flanagan was upgraded from seventh to sixth in the 2014 Boston Marathon results after winner Rita Jeptoo was disqualified for doping offenses.[71][72][73][74]

    2017

    In February 2017, Flanagan announced that she had suffered a fracture in her lower back and would be withdrawing from the Boston Marathon.[75]

    In March 2017, her 2008 Olympic bronze medal in the 10,000 meters was upgraded to silver after runner up Elvan Abeylegesse had her silver medal stripped due to a positive result for banned substances found in a retroactive test.[2]

    New York City Marathon

    On November 5, 2017, Flanagan won the Women's

    Mary Keitany of Kenya and finished ahead of her by 1:01. It was Flanagan's first win in a major marathon and the first win by an American woman at the NYC Marathon in 40 years since Miki Gorman won in 1977.[3] Beforehand, Flanagan hinted a possible retirement with a win in NYC.[76]
    In this marathon, she finished just 5 minutes 39 seconds behind her personal record.

    The marathon started out slow and then proceeded with increases in intensity throughout. The first 5 km averaged 3:51/km. The pace then proceeded to steadily average about 3:33/km for the next 20 km. After the 25 km mark, the pace averaged 3:23/km for about 10 km; after the 32 km mark, competitor Daska made a move to assure the pace was at least maintained. At about the 34 km mark is where Shalane made a move, where her significant change and maintained intensity in pace left her competitors Keitany and Daska behind just after the 37 km mark.[77][78] Her average pace from the 35 km to finish (over which the course averages a slight uphill) was 3:11.4/km, which was faster than the women's-only marathon world record pace of 3:14.8/km (2:17:01).[79][80]

    Coming into the marathon, Mary Keitany was the favorite having won the NYC Marathon three times in the past averaging 2:24 to 2:25, and having a personal record setting 2017 year in the 10k road, half marathon, and marathon (30:41+, 1:05:13, and 2:17:01 respectively) leading up to the NYC Marathon.[81] Although the average pace from the 2:26:53 Shalane ran was slower than NYC Marathon winners in the prior years since 2011, the overall difficulty of the course (as can be inferred by the list of winning times) along with Shalane's sustained surge in pace during the last 5-7k appeared to be one of the main reasons she won the race.

    2018

    Shalane Flanagan went to defend her title and finished third in the

    Mary Keitany in 2:22:38 and close behind Vivian Cheruiyot who finished in 2:26:02 and just 22 seconds ahead of Molly Huddle in fourth.[82] Flanagan sat in fifth at the halfway point but was able to maintain her pace while those ahead of her were slowing down trying to keep up with Mary Keitany. Flanagan was able to secure herself in a podium position during the race after passing two women ahead of her.[83]

    2019

    Shalane Flanagan announced her retirement from professional running on October 21, 2019, via Instagram.[84] Flanagan, in her retirement statement, said she will be one of the head coaches for the Bowerman Track Club.[83]

    2021

    Because the World Marathon Majors had all been rescheduled for the Fall in 2021, Flanagan registered for all 6, attempting to run all 6 Abbot World Marathon Majors, each in under 3 hours, in 6 weeks. Because Tokyo was canceled, she substituted her own marathon run in Oregon, and still completed her goal of "6 in 6", albeit with only 5 of them being majors. On September 26, she finished the 2021 Berlin Marathon in 2:38:32 (17th in the women's division); On October 3 she finished the 2021 London Marathon in 2:35:04 (1st woman from the "mass start", 30 minutes after the elite women's start, to finish); On October 10, she completed the 2021 Chicago Marathon in 2:46:39 (25th in women's division); On October 11, she finished the 2021 Boston Marathon in 2:40:34 (33rd in women's division); On October 18, in place of the canceled Tokyo Marathon, she ran in her own marathon in Oregon in 2:35:14; On November 7 she finished the 2021 New York City Marathon in 2:33:32 (12th in women's division) [85]

    Personal bests

    Distance Performance Location Date Notes
    1500 m 4:05.86 Eugene, Oregon June 10, 2007
    3000 m 8:33.25
    Boston, Massachusetts
    January 27, 2007 National indoor record until 2020[86]
    5000 m 14:44.80 Walnut, California April 13, 2007 National record until 2010[87]
    10,000 m 30:22.22
    Beijing, China
    August 15, 2008 National record until 2016[88]
    10 km (road) 30:52
    Boston, USA
    June 26, 2016 National record
    15,000 m 47:00 Jacksonville, Florida March 15, 2014[54] National record
    Half marathon 1:07:51
    San Diego, California
    June 5, 2016
    Marathon 2:21:14
    Berlin, Germany
    September 28, 2014[89]

    Competition record

    USA National Championships

    Road

    Year Competition Venue Position Event Notes
    2007 USA 5 km Championships Providence, Rhode Island 1st 5 km 15:25
    2008 USA 5 km Championships Providence, Rhode Island 1st 5 km 15:29
    2010 USA Half Marathon Championships
    Houston, Texas
    1st Half marathon 1:09:41
    USA Marathon Championships
    New York City, New York
    1st Marathon 2:28:40
    2012 US Olympic Trials
    Houston, Texas
    1st Marathon 2:25:38
    2014 USA 15 km Championships Jacksonville, Florida 1st 15 km 47:00
    2016 US Olympic Trials Los Angeles, California 3rd Marathon 2:29:19[90]

    Track and field

    Year Competition Venue Position Event Notes
    2003 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships Palo Alto, California 2nd 5000 m 15:20.54
    2004
    US Olympic Trials
    Sacramento, California 3rd 5000 m 15:10.52
    2005 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships Carson, California 1st 5000 m 15:10.96
    2007 USA Indoor Track and Field Championships
    Boston, Massachusetts
    1st 3000 m 8:56.74
    USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    1st 5000 m 14:51.75
    2008
    US Olympic Trials
    Eugene, Oregon 3rd 5000 m 15:02.81
    1st 10,000 m 31:34.81
    2009 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships Eugene, Oregon 2nd 10,000 m 31:23.43
    2011 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships Eugene, Oregon 1st 10,000 m 30:59.97
    2012
    US Olympic Trials
    Eugene, Oregon 3rd 10,000 m 31:59.69
    2013 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships Des Moines, Iowa 1st 10,000 m 31:43.20
    2015 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships Eugene, Oregon 5th 5000 m 15:10.02[91]
    USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships Eugene, Oregon 2nd 10,000 m 31:42.29[91]

    Cross country

    Year Competition Venue Position Event Notes
    2004 USA Cross Country Championships
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    1st Short course 4 km 12:26
    2005 USA Cross Country Championships Vancouver, Washington 1st Short course 4 km 13:24.3
    2007 USA Cross Country Championships Boulder, Colorado 2nd Senior race 27:48
    2008 USA Cross Country Championships
    San Diego, California
    1st Senior race 25:25
    2010 USA Cross Country Championships Spokane, Washington 1st Senior race 25:09.5
    2011 USA Cross Country Championships
    San Diego, California
    1st Senior race 25:47
    2013 USA Cross Country Championships
    St. Louis, Missouri
    1st Senior race 25:49.0

    NCAA championships

    Track and field

    Year Competition Venue Position Event Notes
    Representing North Carolina Tar Heels
    2001
    NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championships
    Fayetteville, Arkansas 7th 1 mile 4:45.25[92]
    NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships
    Eugene, Oregon 10th 1500 m 4:25.67[93]
    2002
    NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championships
    Fayetteville, Arkansas 3rd 1 mile 4:39.11[94]
    6th 3000 m 9:16.30
    2003
    NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championships
    Fayetteville, Arkansas 1st 3000 m 9:01.05[95]
    NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships
    Sacramento, California 2nd 5000 m 15:30.60

    Cross country

    Year Competition Venue Position Notes
    Representing North Carolina Tar Heels
    2000
    NCAA Cross Country Championships
    Ames, Iowa 4th 20:42.7
    2001
    NCAA Cross Country Championships
    Greenville, South Carolina 22nd 21:10
    2002
    NCAA Cross Country Championships
    Terre Haute, Indiana 1st 19:36.0
    2003
    NCAA Cross Country Championships
    Cedar Falls, Iowa 1st 19:30.4

    See also

    • Lynn Jennings, first American woman to win an Olympic medal in the 10,000 m (1992)

    References

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